The first stage of our project, Web Archives for Historians, has concluded. In just under a year, we’ve amassed a healthy bibliography (about twenty works) that fall within the scope of our bibliography – works written by historians covering topics such as: (a) reflections on the need for web preservation, and its current state in different countries and globally as a whole; (b) how historians could, should or should not use web archives; (c) examples of actual uses of web archives as primary sources.

We’ve probably reached the ceiling on this front, however! There aren’t that many historians who are actively working in this area (yet, we dare say). And so we now want Web Archives for Historians to transition into an active blog that will:

Aggregate content by historians or for historians on web archives (similar to the Web Archiving Roundtable) – some of this will come from our own blogs (Peter and Ian), but also from a list of blogs that we’ll be following;

draw attention to talks and slides that we spot at scholarly conferences or in publication venues;

and

carry commissioned posts (eventually).

Our mandate will be to include:

examples of work done using web archives;

historical method in the web archive;

news of significant new projects, tools, data or web services;

contemporary history using the live web (as core source material, rather than just incidentally).

We hope that you join us by following along with your RSS feed, on Twitter, or just by popping by now and again.